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Sunday, July 18, 2021

To Where Did Queen Elizabeth I Disappear in August 1564?

In this series:

Surely, the schedule of events during Queen Elizabeth’s 1564 visit to Cambridge University has a certain interest but perhaps it is better to provide it in another context. '[A] saying was if provision of beer & ale could have been made, her grace would have remained 'till Friday.' her entourage Her highness was so well pleased with all things.’ The Queen departed on Thursday night, August 10th. That is enough to know for our present purposes.

The same of the infamous Hinchinbrook incident that put an exclamation point to the ending. These and a good many other threads of Court and University life upon which we have touched here over the years more properly come together elsewhere.

What is of present interest, it turns out, is that history’s general agreement that the Progress of 1564 ended at Cambridge and the Court returned from whence it came is not correct. All that Nichols can say in his highly dependable Progresses is that

On the 18th, she was in some part of Leicestershire; but the particular place I have not been able to discover.[1]

There were no Cambridge University scholars to write extensive accounts of what occurred outside of the town, before or after. Leicestershire was in the opposite direction from London. Nichols could discover no more.

On September 4, nearly a month after the Queen departed Cambridge, the Spanish Ambassador Guzman de Silva is writing to inform his King Philip:

The Queen returns on the 12th and there will then be greater facility for negotiating, as at present they think of nothing but hunting and the members of the Councils are at their homes.[2]

The Queen will return to Greenwich over a month after leaving Cambridge. In the meantime, part of her retinue have taken a bit of time at the homes they so rarely got to visit. Part trickled back to Greenwich Palace where De Silva overheard their talk. The word was that the Queen along with the rest had gone hunting.

The little known comment by Nichols is supported by the fact that Principal Secretary William Cecil left behind an official letter signed from ‘“Siwell,” 3 Sept. 1564.’[3] Sywell is a small town outside of Northampton. But why would he be there?

In the same letter, De Silva informs the readers that

I understand that the dispute between Lord Robert and Cecil still goes on although they recently went together to a castle called Arruich (Harwich?) and stayed there four days. I have not been able to find out what they did there.[4]

The editor of the Spanish Papers guesses that the castle to which De Silva referred is Harwich. But Harwich is so far north, through such treacherous roads, that the two Lords would have to have gone alone for some reason — some compelling reason.

If “Arruich,” instead, is his best phonetic spelling of Warwick matters begin to make sense. Warwick Castle is the seat of Robert Dudley’s brother Ambrose Dudley, the earl of Warwick. But the pieces still do not quite fit together.

Where is the Queen? She has not gone along to the castle and for good reason. There was no serviceable route for a Royal procession of carts to get to Warwick. The three choices were: 1) to take the old Roman road called “The Great East Road” back south to London, to cross east to west over Akeman street (another Roman road), then to travel north on the Old Fosse Way (yet another Roman road) beside which the castle is situated; or 2) to follow the Via Devana to nearby Godmanchester and to continue north on Watling Street until it arrived at High Cross, where Watling and Fosse meet, and the group to turn south along the Fosse Way, or 3) to continue onward to be received at Royal town of Sutton-Coldfield. Although they were ancient Roman roads they were the only serviceable long distance routes into the northern midlands of England.

As it happens, Sutton-Coldfield hosts the Sutton Chase, one of the few midlands deer hunting grounds not played out in the 16th century. The Chase was once gifted to the Earls of Warwick until it was reclaimed by Henry VIII. This because the Chase ran from Coldfield, in the north, to the vicinity of Warwick Castle, in the south. The entourage clearly went north to hunt. They can only have traveled to the immediate vicinity of Sutton-Coldfield.

But where would the Queen and her considerable servants, administrators  and friends set up the necessary home base for her visit? There might well have been a small number of nearby estates that would meet the requirements. But some 20 miles south of Sutton-Coldfield, just off Watling Street, near present day Rugby, she would necessarily have to pass the hunting lodge of the Earls of Oxford, Bilton Hall. The young Earl, minor Ward of the Queen, had been in her company at Cambridge. He was rarely away if he could help it.

Being a minor, Oxford was a Royal Ward awarded to William Cecil. Robert Dudley had been given the management of most of his lands. For all the young Earl must have been proud to host the Queen, it had not been his choice to make. Either or both of his overseers would actually have been in charge of the hunting lodge through servants there charged with upkeep and receiving guests. It is they who would have offered to host the Queen. Being smallish for such hosting, some number of the servants traveling with the party, and maybe even some of the hunters, would have taken lodging in nearby Tamworth and Wilnecot — satellite villages that serviced the sportsmen who hunted in the Chase.

 



[1] Nichols, John. The Progresses and Public Processions of Queen Elizabeth. I.189n. Citing Burghley Papers, vol. II. p. 736.

[2] De Silva to King. Spanish Papers, Elizabeth I.376.

[3] Calendar of the Cecil Papers in Hatfield House: Volume 1, 1306-1571. 1014. John Mershe to Sir W. Cecil. 

[4] Spanish I.377.


Also at Virtual Grub Street:

  • Sir Robert Carey’s Account of the Death of Queen Elizabeth. March 23, 2021. “When I came to court I found the Queen ill disposed, and she kept her inner lodging; yet she, hearing of my arrival, sent for me.”
  • William Camden to Sir Robert Cotton. March 15, 1603 [1602 O.S.]. October 11, 2020. “Here their topic is the dying Queen Elizabeth. The Royal Court had developed a checklist of activities to be accomplished before a dying monarch should expire.”
  • A Most Curious Account of the Funeral of Queen Elizabeth I: April 28, 1603.  April 28, 2019.  “Once it was clear that James I would face no serious challenges, Cecil and the others could begin to give attention to the matter of the Queen’s funeral.”
  • Queen Elizabeth I’s Heart and the French Ambassador.  April 3, 2019.  “…the Queen of England, with the permission of her physicians, has been able to come out of her private chamber, she has permitted me… to see her…”
  • Lady Southwell on the Final Days of Queen Elizabeth I.  March 24, 2019.  “her majesty told [Lady Scrope] (commanding her to conceal the same ) that she saw, one night, in her bed, her body exceeding lean, and fearful in a light of fire.”
  • Check out the English Renaissance Article Index for many more articles and reviews about this fascinating time and about the Shakespeare Authorship Question.
  • Check out the English Renaissance Letter Index for many letters from this fascinating time, some related to the Shakespeare Authorship Question.
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